Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Trengwainton Garden

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Location
  
Madron, Cornwall

Country
  
England

Current tenant
  
Edward Bolitho

Town or city
  
Penzance

Phone
  
+44 1736 363148

Trengwainton Garden

Type
  
Country House (private) and National Trust Garden

Current tenants
  
Colonel Edward Thomas Bolitho

Address
  
Trengwainton Garden, Madron TR20 8RZ, UK

Hours
  
Open today · 10:30AM–5PMWednesday10:30AM–5PMThursday10:30AM–5PMFriday10:30AM–5PMSaturday10:30AM–5PMSunday10:30AM–5PMMonday10:30AM–5PMTuesday10:30AM–5PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens, Penlee House, The Merry Maidens, Mên‑an‑Tol, Trelissick Garden

Profiles

Trengwainton garden 2013


Trengwainton is a country house and garden situated in Madron, near Penzance, Cornwall, England, UK, which has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1961. The garden is noted for its collection of exotic trees and shrubs and offers views over Mount's Bay and The Lizard.

Contents

Trengwainton gardens in cornwall england


History

A dwelling has been on the site since at least the 16th century and was altered and extented in the 18th and 19th centuries. The house is a grade II listed building. The walled garden, which was built in Elizabethan times, seems to have been constructed as a response to the period of persistently cooler weather known as the Maunder Minimum. The wall prevented warm air from escaping from the garden on cool nights, thereby allowing frost-sensitive fruit trees to survive, despite the cooling climate.

In 1814 the estate was bought by Rose Price the son of a Jamaican sugar plantation owner. Trengwainton was sold following the loss of income resulting in the 1833 Emancipation Act which freed slaves on the family’s Worthy Estate in Jamaica. In 1867 the property was bought by T S Bolitho and was extended with several rooms in 1880; the family still live in Trengwainton House. Rose Price planted trees and built the walled gardens, which are said to be based on the dimensions of Noah’s Ark, and in 1925 Sir Edward Bolitho and his head gardener Alfred Creek continued the development of the garden. They were opened to the public, for the first time, in 1931. The Victoria Medal of Honour for Horticulture was awarded to Sir Edward in 1961 and in the same year he donated 98 acres to the National Trust.

Speed Hill Climb

Held bi-annually, each Easter Monday and August Bank Holiday, from 1946 until 1974, the Trengwainton Speed Hill Climb (grid reference SW443311) was an event organised by the West Cornwall Motor Club. The aim of the climb was for a car, motorbike, or a motorbike and sidecar to ascend the twisting course, from a standing start, as quickly as possible. Fastest times recorded include 21.79 seconds by Roy Opie of Stithians on an Ariel 500 and 22.34 seconds by WC Cuff in a Cooper-Daimler. The event regularly attracted 2,000 spectators.

References

Trengwainton Garden Wikipedia


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